RIP Jacque Fresco, the mind died but the idea lives on.

On May 18th 2017, the world lost one of this century’s greatest minds. At 101 years of age, Jacque Fresco died peacefully in his sleep from health complications of Parkinson’s Disease. In normal Jacque Fresco fashion, his body is now being dissected and examined for science.

Jacque Fresco has inspired millions around the world he has changed my life profoundly. He took everything I knew and tossed it to the side, he shook me to the core. His ideas and thoughts made me feel uncomfortable and frustrated. After the difficult journey of realizing much of what I knew was a lie bestowed upon me by a backwards society, I began to see and think differently about life.

Unlike the majority, Jacque was tired of bandaging our societal wounds, realizing these issues needed addressing holistically. War, poverty, mental health and addictions seemed perpetrated by the monetary system we live in. He understood that we first have to change our value system before we can see lasting positive change for ALL living creatures. His solution — a resourced based economy, where all the earth’s resources are the common heritage of it’s inhabitants. The means of production is not through currency such as money, but real, tangible things — resources.

His views were ahead of his time and cast off by mainstream society. Put into boxes titled, ‘utopian’, ‘idealist’, and ‘crazy’ to name a few. This did not stop him. To his last breath, Jacque had a sense of urgency and knew that if his work did not continue, the world would continue its own path to self destruction — a path of environmental destruction, social injustice, violence, nuclear proliferation, and destitution. Until his passing he continued giving lectures worldwide and created models, illustrations, and blueprints for the betterment of our world. Jacque’s aim of bringing peace and sustainability to all continues to grow through his non-profit organization, The Venus Project. Co-Founder, Roxanne Meadows and dedicated volunteers aim to manifest Jacque’s lifelong work into a reality.

I urge you all to look into Jacque’s work with an open mind, hoping you too will be inspired and use that energy to make our world a better place. All revolutions begin with small individual acts that expand outwards to society. A brilliant mind of our time has left us, but let this not stunt the evolution of his ideas.

‘Democracy is a con game, it is a word invented to outplay people, to make them accept a given institution. All institutions sing ‘we are free’. The minute you hear ‘freedom’ or ‘democracy’ – watch out, because in a truly free nation, no one has to tell you that you’re free.’

Scientists today are commercially rewarded. Chemists are working for the drug companies. There is no such thing as a scientist yet, otherwise they would be out here in the [Occupy] protest. People say that the monetary system produces incentive this may be true in limited areas but it also produces greed, embezzlement, corruption, pollution, jealousy, anger, crime, war, poverty, tremendous scarcity, and unnecessary human suffering. You have to look at the entire picture.’

‘Jealousy is not natural. If I reach for my cat, the dog growls. Feed the dog food every time I hug my cat and after a while the dog would wag its tail every time I would hug my cat. If jealousy was instinctive this wouldn’t happen.’

‘We talk about civilization as though it’s a static state. There are no civilized people yet, it’s a process that’s constantly going on… As long as you have war, police, prisons, crime, you are in the early stages of civilization.’

‘At the beginning of World War II the U.S. had a mere 600 or so first-class fighting aircraft. We rapidly overcame this short supply by turning out more than 90,000 planes a year. The question at the start of World War II was: Do we have enough funds to produce the required implements of war? The answer was No, we did not have enough money, nor did we have enough gold; but we did have more than enough resources. It was the available resources that enabled the US to achieve the high production and efficiency required to win the war. Unfortunately this is only considered in times of war.’

‘I have no notions of a perfect society, I don’t know what that means. I know we can do much better than what we’ve got, I’m no utopian, I’m not a humanist that would like to see everybody living in warmth and harmony: I know that if we don’t live that way, we’ll kill each other and destroy the Earth.’

‘War, poverty, corruption, hunger, misery, human suffering will not change in a monetary system. That is, there will be very little significant change. It’s going to take the redesign of our culture and values.’

‘When I was about 13, one of my relatives stuck his hand into a metal fan while it was on. This led me to design a fan with rubber or fabric blades. I submitted the design to some companies, but they showed no interest. Shortly after that, the product came out on the market. This was my introduction to the market place.’

‘In my work I am not attempting to predict the future. I am only pointing out what is possible with the intelligent application and humane use of science and technology.’

‘In our society, we move people out of government. It’s all operated by machines, meaning – not the people, just the products: the farming, the agriculture, the production – it’s all machine-designed and programming. But it does not program or design people. People are free to live whatever lifestyle they want to. If they hurt other people, they’re helped – they’re not put in prisons.’

‘I asked myself, ‘How are you going to change all these people, they have different values, different customs, different language, different interpretations?’ So that’s the time I joined the Ku Klux Klan in Miami. The reason I joined is to see if I could change them. So I dissolved that organization in a month-and-a-half, alone. [Applause] Then I joined the White Citizen Council. The WCC hates foreigners – all foreigners. So I joined that organization; I dissolved it in one month.’

‘If there’s a group like Amish people, that want to live their own lifestyle – they don’t want to live in our city – they want to live out in the country, with their own projects. We’ll put up the buildings for them, design the buildings for them, design the food production systems for them – if they want us to. But we don’t control them.’

‘The majority of the people of the world today are unsane, not insane, unsane meaning having been exposed to methods of evaluation that have long rendered obsolete, our language in the future will change to a saner language where we have no argument in it, ‘can there be such a language?’ there is, when engineers talk to each other, it’s not subject to interpretation, they use math, they use descriptive systems, if I interpreted what another engineer said in the way I think he meant it: you couldn’t build bridges, dams, power transmission lines. The language has to have meaning.’

‘Instruction in academia did not emphasize what I thought of as essential points. I was interested in the broad range of interrelated connections within the physical sciences, but formal studies isolated each branch of science.”I feel that I have advantages greater than Da Vinci’s such as access to more information, materials, and methods.’

‘In an interview with Larry King:
Do you believe in God?
“No, of course not”.
What do you believe?
“I believe if you want to live in a better world, you have to get off your ass and make it better”.’

31 thoughts on “RIP Jacque Fresco, the mind died but the idea lives on.”

Still coming to terms with the loss of such a man with such gravitas. You inspired me greatly Jacque… Your loss only serves to strengthen my resolve to wake humanity to the idiocy of our current ruling paradigms…
Thank you very much for your contribution to humanity! Recycle fast brother, for we need your awesome saucesomeness in abundance! ❤

Some interesting comments there. He does sound like a fascinating person with some views of real value. Thanks for posting about him…. I’ll be on the lookout for his work, though no time to pursue it right now.

His ideas are going to get corrupted by the system soon or later, why?

1st – Nobody cares or listens because they are brainwashed by the various types of societies;
2nd – Who cares doesn’t have any power to proliferate true conscious ideas;
3rd – Others are afraid to accept them;

Many of his inventions were stolen and used. And I think many people care. Look at how many people supported the Venus Project. But you’re right, these ideas will fought against by the mainstream society. We have to continue our fight.

I really do hope his ideas live on and are further explored and expanded by the realistic minds of others. I really believe in his ideas and the world he wanted to create is the world that I would want to live in.

we should go on doing our best to make his thoughts come true it is the only solution to protect outselves and our world we are all are brothers and sisters i’m crazy about working and joining and giving my whole life for this project pleas roxanne contact me to be co-founder

I am so very grateful that I got to visit The Venus Project and actually meet Jacque and Roxanne this past January. Though I continue to read and refer to his books & videos and recommend his life work to others, part of me did not want to seek him out online to learn of his imminent passing~ Hence, the lengthy delay in discovering and responding. Our sadness is almost always a selfish emotion, yet I feel comforted in knowing his work & legacy is something we can help to manifest, in whatever ways we can.
As Roxanne once replied to me, “What else is there to do.”
Peaceful Blessings…

I used to listen to this man all the time a few years ago. Always fascinating thoughts on man and civilization, his talks calmed me down from a lot of hell I was going thru at the time. Always gave me so much hope for a better life for all. Tearing down racism, money, corruption, war, and getting right down and dirty to the basics humans need to have fulfilled….those basics are simply called NEEDS. Give man what he needs (nutrition, stability, education, social health, etc.) and suffering will end. Easier said than done. RIP Fresco, you wonderful man. The smartest utopian I’ve ever had the pleasure of listening to, and I know he wouldn’t agree with the term “utopian” but dammit that’s what his vision entails if only the world wasn’t in such a raw chaotic state with its politics, religion and drama.